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Election inspectors also have certain authority to maintain order and enforce obedience to their lawful orders during the election and canvass processes. Specifically, "If any person refuses to obey the lawful commands of an inspector, or is disorderly in the presence or hearing of the inspectors, interrupts or disturbs the proceedings, they may order any law enforcement officer to remove the person from the voting area or to take the person into custody." Wis. Stat. § 7.37(2). See also Wisconsin Statute§ 12.13(3)(x)
Thus, an election inspector could command a person to exit the polling place immediately, or contact law enforcement for the purposes of an arrest, if the individual is preventing the official from maintaining order, regardless of prohibitions on open/concealed carry. It would be advisable to give that person the opportunity to remedy the behavior before they are ever removed. Removal would deny the disruptive voter their right to vote, but a situational analysis would need to be performed by the chief inspector in each instance.
Also, the Wisconsin legislature has indicated that school zones are “gun free zones.” Wis. Stat. § 948.605. Anyone who “who knowingly possesses a firearm at a place that the individual knows, or has reasonable cause to believe, is in or on the grounds of a school is guilty of a Class I felony.” Given that schools are often used as polling places, this is an important limitation. Likewise, Wis. Stat. § 175.60(16) prohibits firearms to be carried into police stations, sheriff office, state patrol office, courthouses or municipal courtrooms.
Private or government buildings may post “no weapons” signs that would apply to polling places on their premises. The law generally allows a property's owner (including tenants/lessees) to set restrictions on that property. These prohibitions include openly carried or concealed firearms. Wis. Stat.§§ 943.13, 943.14.
Likewise, local government units may also restrict the right to carry concealed weapons in polling places, even if the election site or voter is not otherwise
restricted by relying on the special event provisions of the Trespass to Land statutes. Wis. Stat.§ 943.13(1m)(c)3. A special event is an event open to the public for a duration of not more than three weeks. The event must also have designated entrances to and from the event that are locked when the event is closed, or be an event that requires admission. Wis. Stat. § 943.13(1e)(h). Organizers of special events, in this case the local governing body, may prohibit access to persons with concealed weapons.
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